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Holiday Self-Care Guide – Find More Joy This Holiday Season

Holiday Self-Care Guide - Find More Joy This Holiday Season

When you think of the holidays coming up, do you feel a little stressed out?

If so, you’re not alone. A survey by the American Psychological Association (APA) showed that nearly half of all women in the U.S. experience “heightened stress” during the holidays—the type that puts their health at risk.

In another survey of 2,000 adults, 77 percent said they have a very difficult time relaxing during the holidays, and usually end up feeling more stressed and worn down than ever. A third survey found that six out of ten people feel pressured to overspend on presents, travel, social outings, and charitable donations.

This year, to help you reduce the stress and experience more joy, we’ve put together this Holiday Self-Care Guide. You’ll find tips on physical, emotional, mental, and financial self-care, all presented here in the hopes of helping you to ease the pressure on yourself.

Let’s make this your best holiday season yet.

Holiday Physical Self-Care Tips

1. Avoid Holiday Weight Gain

It’s really easy to gain weight over the holiday season. A pound or two probably won’t hurt you, but the problem is that whatever we gain over the holidays often stays with us forever, and after a few years, those pounds can add up.

You don’t have to deprive yourself, but if you want to maintain your weight, try these tips:

2. Stick to Your Exercise Routine…No Matter What!

Exercise works miracles. It gives you energy, helps you shed stress, and makes it easier to avoid weight gain. It can also boost your mood and help you sleep. In fact, if you do only one thing differently this holiday season, keep to your exercise routine. It can make a big difference

If you’re away from your usual gym or equipment, substitute walking, running, or YouTube workouts to get you through.

3. Perform an Active Stress-Relieving Activity Each Day

Whenever you undergo a stressful period, your body releases stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. These can cause damage if they stay in your body for too long, so it’s important to do an active stress-relieving activity every day.

Imagine you have a stress-measurement gauge on your arm, sort of like a thermometer. After a few days, your stress goes up into the red and you need to bring it back down into the comfortable range.

To maintain a healthy level of stress, choose a stress-relieving activity you enjoy and make time for it every day. Here are some good examples:

Holiday Financial Self-Care Tips

1. Set a Per-Person Shopping Budget

Rather than decide an overall budget for the holidays, break it down into how much you’ll spend on each person. The more detailed you are, the better. That can help you avoid overspending and having a clear plan will relieve shopping stress.

2. Plan Your Gifts Ahead of Time

It’s super easy to overspend if you simply “go looking” for gifts. You’re more likely to stick to your budget if you plan what you’re getting first. You’ll be more focused when you shop and less likely to be drawn into other “deals” that can encourage you to overspend.

3. Cut Back in Other Areas

You may be worried about spending more on the holidays, but you can counter that by planning to cut back in other areas. Where can you spend less? Maybe you can dine out less often, make coffee at home rather than getting that morning latte before work, carpool to save gas, or cut ties with some of the subscription services you’re getting now.

Reducing your expenses in other areas for a couple of months can go a long way toward relieving holiday financial pressure.

Holiday Mental Self-Care Tips

1. Eliminate One Activity

There’s so much to do over the holidays! We rush to shop, prepare for visitors, cook meals, travel to see loved ones, check-in on the neighbors, and more.

All this extra “doing” is one of the main reasons stress runs so high over the holiday season. You can take it down a notch by eliminating one activity from your “to-do” list at least once a week.

Scratch just one thing off the list and you’ll see—your mood will instantly improve.

2. Schedule a Weekly “Tune Out” Day

The news and social media is a frequent stressor for many people. You don’t need that extra stress during the holidays, so schedule at least one day a week where everyone in the family agrees to tune out—no news and no social media.

Sunday is a great day for this. Have everyone put their phones in a box, keep the television off, and engage in other activities. Read, play board games, put puzzles together, or go outside and play. These types of activities will help you feel more relaxed and can also help you find joy in family time.

3. Clear the Clutter

Clutter weighs on our minds. Research has shown that the more clutter you have in your home environment, the higher your stress hormone levels and the higher your anxiety.

You may not have thought about using the holidays as an excuse to clear some things out, but why not? It will likely reduce your stress and make you feel better. After all, no matter what else is going on, if you come home to a clean, spacious area, that’s bound to be a good thing.

Take a weekend morning and focus on one room. What can you throw out or donate? Get the family involved. Once the room is cleaned out, you can come up with new ways to decorate if you’d like.

Holiday Emotional Self-Care Tips

1. Schedule Time for You

It may feel odd to do so, but during the holiday months, try scheduling at least 30 minutes for yourself into your daily calendar. We always “hope” to have time to relax and enjoy ourselves, but the truth is, if we don’t schedule it, it probably won’t happen.

Don’t leave it to chance. Treat your self-care time like an important appointment, then use it to do something that makes you happy. If you do this regularly, you’ll find it pays off during those stressful holiday weeks.

2. Write a Daily Gratitude List

What are you grateful for? It’s easy to forget when you’re in the middle of all the hustle and bustle, so start keeping a daily gratitude list. Simply take five minutes first thing in the morning or the last thing before bed and write down five things you’re grateful for.

Research shows that gratitude increases good-mood serotonins in your brain, which can defend you against stress. Just thinking about what you’re grateful for protects you emotionally, and helps you maintain a positive attitude through the holidays.

3. Give Up Expectations

One of the reasons we experience stress over the holidays is because we expect things to go a certain way. We’re bombarded with messages of how “perfect” the holidays are supposed to be, to the point that we can struggle if our experiences don’t live up to these polished images.

Realize that no holiday is “perfect.” As noted in the surveys at the beginning of this article, most people struggle over the holidays for one reason or another.

Instead, give up your expectations of having the perfect family, the perfect tree, the perfect meal, the perfect party—whatever it is—and simply open yourself to experiencing the joy of the moment.

The more you can do this, the less stress you’ll experience, and the more likely you’ll be able to relax during the holidays.

Digestion problems can spoil any holiday dinner. Learn how to prevent digestive issues here.

References

Anderer, J. (2019, December 22). Jingle Bell crock: 88% of Americans feel the holiday season is most stressful time of year. Study Finds. https://www.studyfinds.org/jingle-bell-crock-88-of-americans-feel-the-holiday-season-is-most-stressful-time-of-year/

APA. (2006, December 12). APA survey shows holiday stress putting women’s health at risk. https://www.apa.org. https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2006/12/women-stress

Garcia, A. D. (2019, November 13). Holiday brings spending stress for most Americans, survey reveals. Bankrate. https://www.bankrate.com/surveys/holiday-gifting-november-2019/

Saxbe, D. E., & Repetti, R. (2009). No place like home: Home tours correlate with daily patterns of mood and cortisol. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 36(1), 71-81. https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167209352864

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